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Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Forget Tomorrow by Pintip Dunn

Imagine a world where your destiny has already been decided...by your future self.

It's Callie’s seventeenth birthday and, like everyone else, she's eagerly awaiting her vision―a memory sent back in time to sculpt each citizen into the person they're meant to be. A world-class swimmer. A renowned scientist.

Or in Callie's case, a criminal.

In her vision, she sees herself murdering her gifted younger sister. Before she can process what it means, Callie is arrested and placed in Limbo―a hellish prison for those destined to break the law. With the help of her childhood crush, Logan, a boy she hasn’t spoken to in five years, she escapes.

But on the run from her future, as well as the government, Callie sets in motion a chain of events that she hopes will change her fate. If not, she must figure out how to protect her sister from the biggest threat of all—Callie, herself.

“I can’t imagine ever doing what my future
self did.” I swallow hard. “But it happened. So I can’t guarantee I won’t
change my mind.” I straighten my shoulders. “The safest thing for me to do is
take the decision out of my hands. And FuMA’s offering to do just that.”

“Both you and the Chairwoman said it—the
hand of Fate is strong. I have to take extreme measures in order to defeat it.
What can be more extreme than going to detainment?”

He opens his mouth, but before he can say
anything, I twist away and look down the hill. “They’re coming.”

A fast-moving pack of bloodhounds drag
along a blur of guards in navy and white uniforms. They’ve just begun their ascent,
but the dogs are galloping up the slope, as if they can’t wait to rip me apart.
I’ve got a minute, tops.

My hand closes around the black chip, and
I pull it from my pocket. Without another thought, I throw it as hard as I can
over the precipice. There. It’s gone. Just because I’m turning myself in
doesn’t mean I have to tell them about Jessa. They don’t need any more reason
to investigate her.

I turn back to Logan. His eyes pierce me
with an expression of deep, unspeakable regret. Does he actually care?
Underneath the years of silence and betrayal, does a kernel of friendship still
remain?

“I’m sorry, Callie.”

There’s so much I want to say. I’m going
away, for a very long time. This is my last chance to reconcile our old hurts.
The last time to feel a real, human connection.

My last chance for a kiss. Oh, how I want
to lean forward and press my lips against his. I don’t want to die having never
kissed a boy.

But there’s no time. The dogs’ barks
shatter the air like the rat-tat-tat of a machine gun. We hear the scuffle of
feet against dirt. The officers will be on top of us at any moment.

“Go!” I shout at Logan. “Get out of here,
before they

arrest you, too.”

He opens his mouth to say
something, but I shake my head. “Don’t. Don’t make this any harder than it is.”

With his eyebrows pulled together, Logan nods, gives my arm one last squeeze, and disappears over the other side of the hill.

This is it. My last few moments of freedom.

Turning, I raise my hands in surrender. I take a deep breath, savoring the openness of the mountain air. And then I walk straight toward the officers.

When her first-grade teacher asked her what she wanted to be when she grew up, Pintip replied, “An author.” Although she has pursued other interests over the years, this dream has never wavered.

Pintip graduated from Harvard University, magna cum laude, with an A.B. in English Literature and Language. She received her J.D. at Yale Law School, where she was an editor of the YALE LAW JOURNAL. She published an article in the YALE LAW JOURNAL, entitled, “How Judges Overrule: Speech Act Theory and the Doctrine of Stare Decisis,” and received the Barry S. Kaplan Prize for best paper in Law and Literature.

Pintip is represented by literary agent Beth Miller of Writers House. She is a 2012 Golden Heart® finalist and a 2014 double-finalist. She is a member of Romance Writers of America, Washington Romance Writers, YARWA, and The Golden Network.